THE LONG RIDE
Three Gorge residents find solace—and a lot
of other things—in long-distance bicycle touring
By Cate Hotchkiss

50

THE INVISIBLE 30 PERCENT
Latinos make up nearly a third of the
population in Hood River County. Their lives
and culture remain largely unknown to their
neighbors, but many are seeking to find their
place in the community.
By Kathy Watson

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any years ago, when I was working as a feature writer
for the local newspaper, I had an opportunity to do an
in-depth story about a Hood River girl’s Quinceañera,
the traditional coming-of-age celebration for Latino girls when they
turn 15. Along with our staff photographer, I spent the entire day
of the event with my story’s subject, Brenda, from soon after she
was awoken at dawn by a Mariachi band serenading her from the
orchard outside her family’s house until after 10 p.m., when the
dancing at the Expo Center was still going strong. In between were
hours of preparation, more hours at a traditional ceremony at St.
Mary’s Catholic Church, and then the party—attended by hundreds
of people—that started in late afternoon and went on joyfully into the night. Through it all, Brenda
and her family welcomed us into their fold with open arms.
That day left an indelible impression on me, for the sheer force of love and merriment all around, and
for the incredible effort by so many that went into this beloved tradition of celebrating a girl’s transition to womanhood. Perhaps most striking of all, it offered me a glimpse into a completely different
culture and community from the one I lived in—albeit in the very same town.

April 15-16

It’s been more than 15 years since Brenda’s Quinceañera, but the same disconnect still exists in our
community. Writer Kathy Watson explores this issue in her story, “The Invisible 30 Percent,” beginning
on page 50. Latinos make up nearly one-third of the population of Hood River County, but as Watson
aptly points out, most of us have little interaction with them. “We don’t know how they live their lives
or even how we might get to know them better,” she writes. Watson introduces us to some Latino
community leaders, who share their stories, aspirations and fears—and the challenge of honoring
their heritage while also ﬁnding a place for themselves in the social fabric of Hood River.
Cate Hotchkiss writes of a different kind of disconnect in her story about three Gorge residents who
pursue long-distance bike touring (page 42). They disengage from their day-to-day lives for weeks on
the road (or trail), but they ﬁnd a profound connection with other cyclists and the world at large on
their inspiring adventures.
Other stories in this issue include a piece on a grassroots effort to restore the beloved Tilly Jane hut
on Mount Hood (page 56); a story about longtime landscape designer Marion McNew (page 20); and
a preview of the annual Gorge Artists Open Studio Tour (page 60). There’s a lot more in these pages,
too. Welcome to springtime in the Gorge!

SPRING 2017 thegorgemagazine.com

—Janet Cook, Editor

LATINOS MAKING A MARK
The Invisible 30 Percent

RESTORING TILLY JANE
Grassroots Help for Beloved Hut

BICYCLE TOURING
In It For the Long Ride

ABOUT THE COVER
David Hanson photographed Umberto Calderon inside
his Hood River store, Novedades el Potrillo, as part of our
feature story on Latinos in Hood River County. Calderon
has owned his clothing and accessories store for 10
years, and for a decade before that he sold similar goods
from his van in the orchards. modocstories.com

When you have read this issue please pass it on to a friend or recycle it.
Together we can make a diﬀerence in preserving and conserving our resources.
8

The Gorge Magazine is published by Eagle Magazines, Inc., an aﬃliate of Eagle Newspapers,
Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in
any form or by any means, electronically or mechanically, including photocopy, recording
or any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission
of Eagle Magazines, Inc. Articles and photographs appearing in The Gorge Magazine
may not be reproduced in whole or in part without the express written consent of the
publisher. The views and opinions expressed in these articles are not necessarily
those of The Gorge Magazine, Eagle Magazines, Inc., Eagle Newspapers, Inc., or its
employees, staﬀ or management. All RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.

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p. 20
Photo courtesy of Marion McNew

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OUR GORGE : PERSON OF INTEREST

Turning the Flywheel

Mark Thomas coaxes the “health” into “health
care” at Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital
STORY BY KATHY WATSON • PHOTOS BY MICHAEL PETERSON

T

o understand Mark Thomas’ job as Director of Mission Integration, Ethics and Spiritual Care for
Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital, imagine Thomas standing with his finger holding back a
crumbling dike. On one side is the $3.24 trillion U.S. health care industrial complex. On the other
side is Thomas, whose only weapon is a mission statement: “As people of Providence, we reveal God’s love
for all, especially the poor and vulnerable, through our compassionate service.”

“It causes a healthy amount of moral distress for me to be in health care,” Thomas admits. But he
has a fallback: “Our mission doesn’t say health care.”
And yet, Thomas’ paycheck each month comes from a multi-billion dollar corporation with 50 hospitals in seven western states. This is a game of semantics, you might say. Surely this is health care, isn’t it?
“We have to remind ourselves why we’re here,” Thomas says. “We’re called to be a transformative force.
Health care is just how we keep the doors open.” The culture inside Providence, shaped over 160 years
by the holistic Catholic charity of the Sisters of Providence, is really about making people healthier. That
includes health care, yes, but also affordable housing, nutrition, transportation and education. “We have
lots of opportunities to imagine it differently,” he says. “People are so much more than their diagnoses.”
Thomas imagines a future for Providence, and America, in which less money is spent on health care,
and yet people are healthier. “We’re buying the wrong stuff,” he says of America’s spending on health
care. “You don’t have a headache for want of an aspirin. There’s the cause beneath the cause.”
Inside Providence, he leads two chaplains in providing spiritual care. As for “mission integration,”
he’s a check and balance, making sure the mission and values are part of all they do. Outside Providence, he is a critical thread in the social services fabric. He serves on the boards of The Next Door,
One Community Health, Gorge Ecumenical Ministries, and the Central Oregon Leadership Council
of the Oregon Community Foundation, and was the co-convener of the Food Security Coalition, a
Governor’s Oregon Solutions project.
Thomas says he is humbled by the many people and organizations in the Gorge that share in
12

the work of making a diverse population healthier. While Providence helped fund a community
needs assessment that identified roadblocks to
health, for example, he names many partners:
Columbia Gorge Health Council, The Next Door,
One Community Health, Gorge Grown Food Network. In other words, Thomas isn’t pushing back
on the dike alone. Together, that collaboration
earned the $25,000 Culture of Health Prize from
the Robert Word Johnson Foundation last year.
It’s collaboration that gives Thomas the best day
at the office. “I’ve come to realize collaboration has
its own rewards, when we envision what we can do
together. I’m a connector, that’s what I love doing.”
By “turning the flywheel” as he calls it, Thomas has
brought Providence to the table to help fund a long
list of community projects, from training health
workers to funding a community grant writer.
Thomas, 41, was born and raised in Bend. His
family wasn’t particularly religious. As a teen, he
met some people he admired in Young Life, and
began to think about spiritual things. He chose
religious studies at Stanford, and after graduation, taught in a boarding school in Colorado. On

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Mark Thomas, who serves as Director of Mission Integration, Ethics and Spiritual Care for Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital, works
both inside the hospital providing spiritual care, and out in the community helping to create collaborations that advance community health.

Tuesday nights, he’d take mountain roads to Old
Snowmass and visit the Trappist Monastery for
vespers. The pull of ministry tugged at him, and
he applied to seminary. But there was another
pull, the family’s fourth-generation car dealership in Bend. He ultimately chose seminary at the
Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley.
Thomas was drawn to Catholicism. “It’s really
the most diverse church: here comes everybody!
And for me, it has the right integration of theology and spirituality,” he says. He converted to Catholicism after he received his Masters of Divinity.
He decided he wanted to work outside the
church. And something his father, Bob Thomas
the car dealer, said to him made him very interested in Providence.
“Dad was on the foundation board at St.
Charles,” says Thomas—then a Providence hospital, in Bend. “Sister Catherine had come to run
the hospital in 1969. My dad had this deep, very
profound admiration of her. She was gutsy, courageous. My dad is an unusual businessman. He
always cared much more for developing employees as humans. He treated the car dealership as a
values-based business. And he took note of Sister
Catherine’s mission-driven values-based hospital.
He always called it a ‘cathedral of healing.’”
Just as Thomas was going off to seminary,
Sister Catherine was retiring. “My Dad said to
me, ‘What will they do without her, how will they
stay grounded?’ That was before I knew anything
about mission integration.”
Nine years ago, he came to Providence in
Hood River. He and his wife Gwen, a hospice social worker, have two children: Ian, 8, and Rosie,
10. Thomas walks the kids to school each morning,

loves bike racing and skiing. He didn’t go into the
family business, but he says, “In a sense, I’m doing
what my Dad did, continuing a kind of legacy.
I’m working with our employees, helping them
understand this is our ministry.”
On a recent Monday morning, people hustle
into the boardroom at Providence for a managers’
meeting. Thomas folds his 6-foot-5 frame into a
chair near the middle of the table. He’s asked to
open the meeting with a reflection.
“What do you know about this word ‘mindfulness?’” he asks. People respond around the
table: deliberate, focus, awareness, present.
“Those are all accurate,” responds Thomas.
“We have a frenetic pace here at Providence. We
could benefit from more focus, more quiet attentiveness.” He tells them how he and CEO Jeanie
Vieira would like to reformat the daily “safety huddle” meeting and reaches to pick up a Hoberman
Sphere, a large ball that expands and contracts. He
explains how the meeting will include an exercise
in breathing together, as he slowly manipulates the
sphere. He invites everyone to breath with him.
Thomas’ voice is quiet and measured, but
with a bike-racer’s intensity. You can hear, too,
the patient father, the sympathetic chaplain, and
the passion of a Bend nun. You can sense why 25
administrators would willingly practice breathing
with him in the middle of a busy Monday.
He ends the reflection with something they
are all used to doing. Together, they recite the
mission statement.
Kathy Watson is a Hood River chef and writer and is currently
working on a memoir, “No Bun for Corky: My Life as a Small
Town Chef”.
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OUR GORGE : VENTURES

In Search of a
Smoother Ride
Cassie Nobbs helps Gorge cyclists get the right
bike fit
BY CATE HOTCHKISS • PHOTOS COURTESY OF CASSIE NOBBS

W

hether you’re whipping up dirt or cruising around town, you should feel comfortable on your
bicycle. If you don’t, there’s a good chance you have a bad bike fit.

Common symptoms of an ill-fitting bike include knee, butt, back, foot and neck pain as well
as hand and saddle-area numbness, according to Cassie Nobbs, a Hood River-based physical therapist
and bike-fit expert who launched Gorge Bike Fitter in 2014. “A lot of people want to ride their bikes and
they like the idea of riding their bikes, but they’re uncomfortable, so it’s not really that much fun for
them,” Nobbs says. “I like making it fun.”
During her two-hour bike fit sessions, Nobbs helps cyclists of all ages become one with their bikes as if
the bike is an extension of their body. This merging of bike and biker provides benefits beyond comfort: it
enhances performance, efficiency and stability and helps to prevent overuse injuries, she says.
The process involves an understanding of bike mechanics and biomechanics, or how the body is
affected while the rider is pedaling, Nobbs explains, as well as keen observation skills — all of which
she’s honed through practicing physical therapy and racing bikes for more than two decades. She also
completed an advanced bike-fit certification program for physical therapists in 2013.
Nobbs begins a fitting with what she calls a “by-the-numbers fit” during which she takes many measurements and adjusts the bike based on what the research suggests will work best. Geometry plays a
key role. For instance, to help determine the correct distance between the handlebars and the rider’s
hips, she uses a telescoping protractor to measure trunk and shoulder angles. With an angle finder tool,
she measures the bike’s tube angles, which not only affect how the bike performs, but also how she
positions the person for optimal handling of the bike.
14

From there, she makes subtle adjustments,
often to the saddle, until she finds the sweet spot
— that precise place where, all of a sudden, she
sees the person’s body relax. “When their shoulders relax, their arms loosen, and their spine looks
like it’s not tense or at the end range of motion, I
know I’m getting to that point where the person is
going to be happier on the bike,” she says.
In early 2015, Jeff Irwin was decidedly unhappy on his bike. A longtime endurance runner and self-described IT nerd from Hood River,
Irwin sought Nobbs’ expertise when, with little
cycling experience, he began training for his first
Ironman triathlon. “I couldn’t endure more than
an hour on my bike before my knees were sore
and my back was killing me,” he says. “And then I
wouldn’t want to get on the thing for a couple of
days. I knew I had to get some help.”
A four-time Ironman finisher herself, Nobbs
adjusted Irwin’s bike and gave him tips on how to

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avoid neck strain on a tri-bike. Irwin says, “You’re
in this God-awful aero position where you’re
hunched over like a turtle, but you still have to
get your head up because you can’t just look at
the front tire. Even with the most perfect fit, it’s
still not a natural position. Cassie was good at letting me know that. She was really great at helping
me set expectations.” He describes his Ironman
experience as “phenomenal” and plans to do another this summer.
SHOPPING FOR A BIKE

Nobbs not only retrofits bikes, she helps
people choose new ones. With her own fleet of
five bikes and a sixth on her wish list — “because
you gotta have a fat bike now to ride on sand and
snow,” she says — she is well acquainted with all
styles of riding.
“The bike industry is extremely overwhelming
for a lot of people when they first start looking
at bikes,” she says. She narrows their options
by first helping them decide which type of bike
and frame materials would best fit their cycling
goals and budget. “Different materials used for
bicycle fabrication all have different pros and
cons. Choosing the right frame material comes
down to what’s important to the client given
their riding style and preferences for comfort and
performance. Often the right bike is not the most
expensive, high performance, or lightest bike.”
Once she and the client identify suitable models,
Nobbs determines the correct frame size with a

Cassie Nobbs oﬀers bike fitting services for all categories of
bikes. She does retrofitting—helping clients get a better fit on
their existing bike—as well as consultation for those looking to
buy a new bike.

sizer cycle, a mocked-up bike frame that allows her
to simulate any upright bike the client is thinking
about buying, but may not be available to test ride
locally. The sizer bike saved Cathy Stever, a retired Hood River art teacher and avid cyclist, from
spending thousands of dollars on a too-big bike.
Last October, Stever, who is 5 feet 3 inches tall,
wasn’t sure if she needed a medium- or small-sized
Juliana Joplin, a high-end mountain bike she was
planning to order through Hood River Bicycles.
Nobbs first configured the sizer cycle to match up
with the Joplin’s medium frame. “Cassie had me
pedal for five minutes and right away I could tell
it wasn’t going to work,” Stever says. “My back was
starting to strain so she changed the sizer to the
smaller frame, which worked perfectly.”
Since then, Stever has rocked her Joplin on
some tough Gorge trails. “I’m flowing over rubble
and making corners and pitches that challenged
me with my former bike,” she says. “Riding is definitely more fun and not as frustrating as in the
past. It really paid off to have the bike fit.”
For more information, go to gorgebikeﬁtter.com

Based in Hood River, Cate Hotchkiss writes about health and
wellness for national and regional magazines. She blogs at
gorgegirlruns.com.

The Best Western Plus Hood River Inn celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. It opened in 1967
as the Eddie Mays Inn, and became part of the Best Western network 25 years ago. The Inn has
evolved over the decades, but has remained a popular hotel, restaurant and lounge. Go to the
website for a calendar of planned celebration events throughout the year, including “throw-back” menu
specials in the restaurant and lounge and discounted room rates. And don’t miss the 50th anniversary
timeline posted near the Cebu Lounge. hoodriverinn.com

1

The Maryhill Museum of Art opens for
the season March 15 with a special exhibition featuring recent additions to the
museum’s collection. Something for Everyone:
New Treasures from the Permanent Collection
features works added to the museum’s holdings
since 2010, including Romanian folk clothing,
American Indian baskets and beadwork, medieval illuminated manuscripts, art glass, and
works by Northwest artists Lillian Pitt, Rick
Bartow and Betty LaDuke. Other exhibits on
display through November 15 include ancient
Greek ceramics and a new rotation in the museum’s popular Théâtre de la Mode exhibition
of post-WWII French haute couture fashions.
maryhillmuseum.org

16

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Adam Lapierre

Gorge Gravel Grinder

3

Kick off the biking season with the Gorge Gravel Grinder on April 2. The first in the threeride Oregon Gravel Grinder series, the Gorge event offers riders three different courses to
choose from—the Small Grind, at 41 miles; the Medium Grind, which is 65 miles; and the
96-mile Big Grind. All rides start and finish in The Dalles, and feature well stocked aid stations.
Don’t miss the after party at Clocktower Ales. oregongravelgrinder.com

Book Launch

4

Join Waucoma Bookstore and local author and farmer Andrea Bemis for the book launch party for
her cookbook, Dishing up the Dirt, on March 19 from 3 to 5 p.m. at Springhouse Cellar in Hood
River. Bemis, who lives with her husband on a six-acre organic farm in Parkdale, is the creator of a
popular farm-to-table blog. Her cookbook builds on that success and features more than 100 inventive,
seasonal recipes with a focus on whole, locally-sourced foods. The book also features beautiful photographs and short essays about life on Tumbleweed Farm. The launch party features live music and appetizers from the cookbook catered by the Fresh Start Culinary Arts program. waucomabookstore.com
Ben Mitchell

Spring Skiing

5

For those who just can’t get enough of the white stuff, Mt. Hood Meadows
should feature up some excellent spring skiing after this winter’s epic
snowfall. The ski resort also offers lots of fun springtime events to go with
the longer days. Highlights include Spring Demo Day March 19; Spring Brew
Fest on Paradise Deck on March 25; Double Mountain Mazotfest, a benefit for
the Mt. Hood Meadows Avalanche Dogs, and Ski to Defeat ALS, both on April 8;
and the infamous Sno-Kona Pond Skim on April 29. skihood.com
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OUR GORGE : BEST OF THE GORGE

Blossom Time

6

8

Hood River’s Mount N Barrel offers guided
wine tasting bike tours through the Hood
River Valley starting in April, with bikes
and helmets provided. Options include a leisurely
7-mile ride, with stops at three wineries (Phelps
Creek Vineyard, Cathedral Ridge Winery and
Marchesi Vineyard) and an intermediate, 10mile ride, with visits to three wineries and a cidery ( Wy’East Vineyards, Mt. Hood Winery, The
Gorge White House and a “surprise stop”). The
rides include private vineyard tours, wine tasting
and food pairings. Rides can be upgraded with
optional add-ons, or customized.
MountNbarreL.com

Michael Peterson

The former Hood River Valley Blossom Fest has morphed into an entire month of events
during April, now known as Blossom Time, which celebrates the beauty and agricultural
heritage of the area. Many of the farms, stands and wineries on the 35-mile Hood River County
Fruit Loop offer special events and activities during the month. Don’t miss the Blossom Craft Show
April 15-16 at the Hood River County Fairgrounds, or the Hood River Hard-Pressed Cider Fest April
22 at 3315 Stadelman Drive in Hood River. hoodriver.org

Wine Country
Bike Tours

Your Pass Now

7

Paying day use recreation fees in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area just got easier.
Starting this spring, a pilot program allows users to purchase passes online using a smartphone
or other digital device. Passes can be purchased onsite, with no paperwork required, thanks to
digital technology that allows rangers to validate license plates online. “This makes it more convenient than ever for people to connect with their public lands with the added benefit of streamlining
our administrative process,” said National Scenic Area Manager Lynn Burditt. The CRGNSA is one
of only four federal recreation sites in the country to implement the program. yourpassnow.com

18

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Pregnant?
Have a
Newborn?
Have you received your free
Welcome Baby packet yet?
Packet Includes:
l
Coupons for free local services
l
Story times and other events
l
Free book and gift for baby
l
Parenting information and
much more!

Marion McNew has been bringing her creative
vision to public and private places in the Gorge for
nearly three decades

STORY BY JANET COOK • PHOTOS COURTESY OF MARION McNEW

W

hen Marion McNew first came to the Gorge from her native Germany in 1982 for a two-month
stay with a local orcharding family, it was supposed to be just another learning experience during
her university studies in horticulture at the University of Hannover. She was here to study fruit
growing. But the same thing happened to her that’s befallen many other visitors.

Susan Ballier

“I just loved it here,” she says. By the time she graduated with a master’s degree in horticulture, she’d
already visited the Gorge several more times and, in 1984, McNew moved permanently to Hood River.
By then she’d decided she didn’t want to become an orchardist; it was plants she loved—perennials
in particular. So in 1985 she launched Mt. Hood Gardens, a perennial wholesale nursery. “Perennials
were just starting to take off here,” McNew says. With her deep knowledge of perennials, McNew grew
her business quickly. She had an international import license and brought plants in from abroad that
she knew would grow well here. She eventually was growing 200,000 plants, which she sold to nurseries
in the Portland area and shipped to seven different states.

20

By the late 1980s, McNew was starting to
get calls for landscape design—something that
was nearly nonexistent when she started her
business. Her wholesale nursery was going well,
and she was hesitant at first to create more work
for herself. But the artistry of landscape design
pulled at her—it was something she’d loved since
childhood, when her father took her to gardens
and parks all over Europe during their travels—so
she began taking on a few clients.
Some of her first projects were in The Dalles.
Her reputation grew and she got busier, juggling
the perennial nursery and her landscape design
work. “I was working 60- to 80-hour weeks,” McNew
recalls. “More and more people were moving
here, and they wanted landscaped gardens.” Finally, in 1997, McNew closed the nursery side of
her business to focus solely on landscape design
and installation.
In the 20 years since then, McNew has transformed countless public, private and commercial
spaces in the Gorge. Her landscape designs and

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Spectacular views

Next to the Bridge of the Gods
• Waterfall
viewing, hiking,
biking, sailing
and more.
• Indoor pool
and spa

Susan Ballier

• Complimentary
hot breakfast

Landscape designer Marion McNew, opposite, and her company, Mt. Hood Gardens, has created countless public and private spaces in the
Gorge over the last 30 years, ranging from private patios to public parks—including Stratton Gardens, above, an award-winning downtown
Hood River park. Clients can view McNew’s stock beds, below, which grow just outside her oﬃce.

installations grace downtown Hood River at Overlook Memorial Park and the adjacent Stratton Gardens; the Second Street Pocket Park; Georgiana Smith Park surrounding the Hood River County Library;
and the Memory Garden at Hospice of the Gorge.
Other recognizable public landscapes created by McNew include the Willow Ponds residential
neighborhood and the Oak Street Hotel in Hood River, and the Creek View residential townhouse
development in The Dalles. At private residences throughout the Gorge, McNew has created and implemented designs ranging from small rock gardens to acres of landscapes with multiple areas of hardscape (patios, paths and walls) combined with plantings.
McNew credits the years she spent tending her perennial nursery with helping her understand what
grows best in various areas of the Gorge. “We have so many microclimates here,” she says. “Designing a
garden in Parkdale is very different than designing one in Mosier.” Even a few miles in either direction
in Hood River can make a difference, she says.
Over time, McNew has also learned the geological nuances of the area—where the soil is sandy,
where it’s heavier in clay, where boulders deposited by prehistoric floods proliferate, where the soil
drains well or poorly. All of these things are important for cost estimating, she says, as well as for creating a successful landscape design. “It took quite a few years to acquire that knowledge,” she says. “It

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Making History
Come Alive…

VISIT OUR HISTORIC
Hood River Photo Blog:
historichoodriver.com
DISCOVER culture and history through fresh,
engaging exhibits, and exciting programs
EXPLORE hands-on activities and educational
displays for families and children of all ages

McNew designed and installed extensive landscaping, including a kitchen garden and several patios, at Sakura Ridge Farm and Lodge
on Hood River’s Westside, above. At the Oak Street Hotel in downtown Hood River, McNew transformed a former sloped lawn into a lush
perennial garden oasis complete with a sunken patio.

has been a challenge, but also very interesting.”
Another integral part of McNew’s work is
what she calls the plant habitat principle, a form
of ecological planting design developed in her
native Germany. “Plant choices are based on ecological, rather than purely aesthetic criteria,” she
explains. “You group plants together that have
similar needs and similar vigor.” The result is that
plants in one area of a garden, for example, all
have similar water needs and grow at a similar
rate—the plants will “look congruent,” she says.
“By providing the plants with their preferred habitat, they form compatible plant communities.
They will thrive and flourish without excessive
intervention by the gardener.”
McNew strives to create low maintenance
landscapes, and teaches clients how to perform
routine maintenance. She and her crew also provide maintenance programs for clients, mainly in
the spring and fall. Because she has so many longtime clients—some of whom she provides ongoing maintenance and others who continually add
on or revamp landscapes, or whose large projects
are implemented over several years—McNew has
a waiting list for new clients. She is able to take
on only 5 to 10 new projects every year.
For all of her projects, big or small, McNew
weaves a theme into the design. It could be as
simple as a style of garden—a Mediterranean
garden, for example, or a Zen garden—or more
complex, as at Overlook Memorial Park where the

hillside landscape of carefully placed rocks and
plantings simulates a river delta.
It’s this artistry in landscape design that continues to intrigue McNew. Whether it’s a public
park, where she starts with “a broad vision and
explores all possibilities,” or a private residence,
where she incorporates her client’s wishes along
with architecture and surroundings to create a
design, McNew finds the creativity of transforming
a space most satisfying.
“One of my strengths is visualizing possibilities,” she says. “People think landscaping is just
plants. It’s really about vision.”
For more, go to mounthoodgardens.com

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The Accidental Bakers
For love of a baguette, Lou and Anne Gehrig
launched a bakery

STORY BY PEGGY DILLS KELTER • PHOTOS BY MICHAEL PETERSON

She has never baked
A loaf of bread in her life
Preferring instead,
Wonder.
Leslie Cook 1956-1979

24

Courtesy of Anne and Lou Gehrig

OUR GORGE : LOCAVORE

I

n 1978, the year Leslie Cook wrote her poem, most of us associated the word “bread” with something
white, soft, sliced and topped with bologna or peanut butter. The Seventies was also the decade when
many of us ventured to Europe to learn another language, explore art and architecture, and embrace
other cultures through food and drink. One of the most important foods we got up close and personal with
was bread — from long crispy baguettes to chocolate filled croissants.

Anne Gehrig was one of those adventurers. As part of her college education, she lived and studied
in France. There she became infatuated with French bread. Upon returning to the United States, she
set upon the task of recreating the delicious bread she had come to love in Europe. Through trial and
error, she was able to create the delectable bread of her memory — crusty on the outside, airy and soft
within, served straight out of the oven.
At the same time, she fell in love with Lou Gehrig, an Odell, Ore., native with deep roots in the
Hood River Valley. Lou’s own home-baked bread at the time was a multi-pound loaf of pumpkin bread,
which they both agree was more useful as a doorstop than as something to consume.
Flash forward to 1983. Lou and Anne were married and the parents of a one-year-old daughter,
Jessie. Hood River was becoming known as a great place to visit, and with the tourists came new restaurants and specialty shops. Jackie Dee’s Gift Shop was one such downtown Hood River business. One
day, while Lou was shopping there, he got in a discussion about French bread with the owner, Jackie
Dee Betts. He described the fabulous baguettes his wife made. Before he knew it, Jackie had ordered
40 loaves and the Gehrigs were in the bakery business. The Flour Garden Baking Company was born.
At first, Anne and Lou mixed the dough completely without a machine, using a huge ceramic bowl,
wooden spoons and bare hands. Soon demand for their bread necessitated equipment. Lou found a
used “Century” mixer that was a cast-off from the Navy. “A century — that’s probably about how old it
was,” Anne jokes. They bought a bank of ovens and set up shop in a downstairs room, now known as
The Bakery. They consulted with other home businesses and got all the necessary licensure.

Lou and Anne Gehrig, opposite inset, started Flour Garden Baking Company more than 30 years ago
after Anne perfected a recipe for making French baguettes. As demand grew, they turned a downstairs
room of their house into a bakery, and built a business.

Flour Garden grew quickly as they picked up new clients. The Gehrigs
met their first financial goal, buying a couch they previously hadn’t had money to
purchase. They leased out their orchard and their service station and Anne
went back to work full time as an elementary school teacher while Lou
became a full-time baker. They both got up each morning at 4 a.m., and Anne
helped bake until school started. In addition to lots of new customers, their
family had grown to three with the addition of sons Colin and Jonathan.
Juggling baking, bread deliveries, kids and Anne’s teaching career was
always a challenge, but they still laugh at some of their fondest memories.
When the kids were toddlers, Lou would deliver them to daycare when he
made the bread deliveries. “Lou would bring out the bread and then bring
out the kids one at a time,” Anne recounts. “Jessie, the oldest, ate the tops
off the bread while Lou was fetching another kid.” Lou continues, “I said, I’m
going to be smarter than that. I’m going to get Colin and Jonathan and then
the bread. Then I’ll go back in the house and get Jessie.” When he came out
of the house, Colin had climbed into the driver’s seat and was pretending
to drive. Somehow he got the Jeep out of gear and it rolled. Luckily, no one
was hurt, and the kids and bread were delivered safely.
The Gehrigs have had some other adventures over the years. They live
high up in the East Hills, so snow and ice make bread deliveries interesting. In
winter, they sometimes resort to pick-axes and boot chains to get themselves
down the hill. The bread rides comfortably on their backs, packed carefully in
their children’s old camping gear. But their favorite delivery story happened
along Highway 35 many years ago. A Mount Hood restaurant owner, picking
up his bread, rendezvoused with Lou along the side of the highway near the
sawmill. Lou handed a bag of bread to his customer, and his customer got out
his wallet. A suspicious onlooker called the police, assuming a drug deal was
in progress. An officer soon arrived, and the three men had a good laugh.
Over the years, Flour Garden has serviced over 30 different accounts,
making and delivering delicious baked goods to myriad businesses — the
local fruit packing houses, coffee shops, elegant restaurants and even gas
stations. The Gehrig’s repertoire has evolved as the demands from customers
have changed. In addition to baguettes (still their favorite thing to bake),
they’ve made whole grain loaves, tri-color braids, pizza crusts, croissants,

Lou Gehrig does much of the baking for Flour Garden, while Anne works as a schoolteacher in Hood River. Baguettes are still their favorite
thing to bake, but the Gehrigs make a variety of other items for delivery to local stores, restaurants and businesses.

bread sticks, hamburger buns, focaccia and cranberry walnut bread.
At one time, they were baking 72 bread sticks a day, five days a week, for hungry Hood River Valley
High School students. Each bread stick had to be hand-rolled and topped with cheese, jalapenos or
pepperoni. Eventually, the demand was too much for their small bakery and they were forced to give
up the high school account.
Anne and Lou love baking bread, but as they get older they sometimes think about ratcheting down
the business. For now, you can enjoy Flour Garden’s baked goods at a dozen different businesses, including Ovino’s Market, the Farm Stand, Ground, Bette’s Place, Doppio and Boda’s Kitchen. Regardless
of where you enjoy Flour Garden’s bread, you’ll agree, it’s not Wonder, it’s wonderful.
Peggy Dills Kelter is an artist and writer who lives in Hood River. She’s a frequent contributor to The Gorge Magazine.

a d o cumentary film

FOR OVER 19 YEARS THIS HAS BEEN ONE OF HOOD RIVER’S MOST BELOVED TRADITIONS
For more information visit www.TheLastNutcracker.com

Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of
marijuana. For use only by adults twenty-one years of age or
older. Keep marijuana out of the reach of children.

THE GORGE MAGAZINE : SPRING 2017 27

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OUR GORGE : STYLE + DESIGN

The Pretty Good House
A Hood River home combines energy-efficiency
with practicality
BY JANET COOK • PHOTOS BY LAURIE BLACK

M

att and Mary Mesa first moved to the Gorge in 1984 from California. They settled in Mill A, Wash.,
close to Matt’s work as a research fisheries biologist. They built a house and a life there, raising
their two daughters, leaving only for a stint while Matt got his master’s degree at Oregon State
University. When he later pursued his Ph.D., he was able to do most of the work from home. Mary had a
career as a schoolteacher in Stevenson.

Then, about five years ago, Mary was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s disease. “We had to
start making plans for the future,” Matt said. They knew they wanted to drastically downsize from their
3,700-square-foot, multi-level home to a house with a simple layout that was easy to navigate and maintain. Moving to Hood River made sense, not only because most of their shopping and social life already
took place there, but also for proximity to medical facilities and other amenities.
The couple still wanted to have some privacy and open space around them. They eventually found
some land for sale on Hood River’s Westside that had all utilities in place. (A house once built on the
property had been moved to another location.) They bought the land, spanning more than four acres,
and began planning for their new home where they could age in place in the best way possible.
Matt wanted to build a contemporary house that was very energy efficient. He researched green
building ideas, including the passive house concept popularized in Germany. “The whole idea is building
a really tight, energy efficient house, with strict specs to follow,” Matt said. “The problem is it can be
prohibitively expensive if you follow all the guidelines.” His research led him to a relatively new green
building movement known as the Pretty Good House.
“It’s taking the passive house concept and structuring it for the common man,” Matt said. “It’s looking
at what’s really important in the passive house, and what are parts of it we could ignore. It’s building a
smaller home that’s mostly efficient.”
Although he knew several contractors in the area, Matt sought out Green Home Construction for
its “commitment to energy efficiency,” he said. Matt proposed the Pretty Good House idea, and Green
Home owner Tom Reid and his crew were excited to pursue the concept.
28

The result is a 1,500-square-foot, single-level
home with multiple energy efficient features
combined with some cost-saving measures. Double stud walls create about twice the insulation
found in regular code-built homes. Attention was
paid to creating a very tight building envelope —
including its slab-on-grade foundation — which
makes it possible to heat the house entirely with
a small gas fireplace and a mini split heat pump;
often just one or the other is enough. The southern
exposure allows for passive solar heating, and
carefully placed eaves help block direct sunlight
during the summer. Concrete floors throughout
the house create thermal mass to help further
regulate the home’s temperature.
Due to the multiple insulation factors, the
Mesas “compromised” on windows, going for a
middle-of-the-road option rather than more expensive, highly insulated ones.
Fiber-cement siding and a metal roof add to
the home’s long-term durability and low maintenance costs.
“This house was a mix of higher end finishes
along with some very cost effective ones,” Reid,
said. “In the end, I think it strikes a nice balance

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between being well designed, well built and yet still affordable.”
The Mesas, who have lived in their new home for a year-and-a-half, are
pleased with it. “The house has been performing pretty well energy-wise,”
Matt said. In addition, the design and construction exceeded his expectations. “The attention to detail by Green Home was impeccable. The craftsmanship was really there,” he said.
“It’s just so practical,” Matt added. “It’s a great combination of energy
efficiency and practicality.”

Matt and Mary Mesa’s 1,500-square-foot home features a simple layout, including a combined kitchen,
dining area and living room that opens through a giant sliding door onto a patio for indoor-outdoor
living. Features like double stud walls, concrete floors and southern exposure create energy efficiency,
helping keep the home warm in the winter and cool in the summer.

THE GORGE’S ONLY FULL-SERVICE BEAD,
ROCK, AND MINERAL EXTRAVAGANZA

“Green Home helped us achieve our goal to be
sustainable and also showed us how choosing solar
would be the right dollars and cents decision.”
— Peter Belmont

Camas and Washougal
Towns near Washington’s gateway to the Gorge beckon visitors with an enticing blend
of old and new
STORY BY VIKI EIERDAM • PHOTOS COURTESY OF DOWNTOWN CAMAS ASSOCIATION AND CAMAS-WASHOUGAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

A

s the gateway to the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area on the Washington side, Washougal
abounds with its own flavor of attractions. Recent growth has supported the addition of familyfriendly breweries and restaurants with a locally focused sourcing philosophy. A few miles to the
west lies the town of Camas, boasting tree-lined streets along its walkable downtown core. Here, the vibe is
decidedly more cosmopolitan—in a small town kind of way.

Together, these two cities are well worth a visit on your way to or from the Gorge—or simply as a
destination unto themselves.
Since 1912 Pendleton Woolen Mills Washougal Mill has been crafting Native American-inspired
blankets from 100 percent wool. Over the years a contemporary line of clothing, home textiles and
accessories has been added. Complimentary tours are given at set times on weekdays allowing guests
to experience the many steps that go into bringing these intricate pieces to life. At the end of the tour,
take time to browse the extensive store.
If this look back in time has whetted your appetite for more, delve a little deeper next door at the
Two Rivers Heritage Museum. Rotating exhibits have included a one-room schoolhouse from the late
1800s, historic photos of the area’s early years and artifacts documenting Washougal as a stopping point
on Lewis and Clark’s Corp of Discovery journey.
Directly across Highway 14—via the SR-14 Pedestrian Tunnel—is the entrance to a multi-use trail
that runs along the dike and drops down onto Cottonwood Beach Park (where Captain Lewis camped
in 1806), or you can continue the full three miles into the Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge.
Once there, meander along the Gibbons Creek Wildlife Art Trail to enjoy the hundreds of potential bird
sightings. This is a great spot for a late picnic or just a place to ponder and stroll.
From April through July, Mt. Pleasant Iris Farm is bursting with color and the public is encouraged
to view the display for themselves. Only 10 minutes from downtown, it feels like a world away. Revel in
the shades of blue, purple, yellow and more. Owner Chad Harris has been growing irises for more than
35 years, and is a Master Judge with the American Iris Society.
30

Located north of downtown on the Washougal
River, Sandy Swimming Hole Park is the place
to be when the sun comes out. For more warm
weather options, check out Lacamas Lake in Camas.
No gear? No problem. Sweetwater SUP Rentals
can outfit you with paddleboards and kayaks.
Brewcouver has infiltrated East County. From
54°40’, Amnesia and Doomsday Brewing in Washougal to A Beer at a Time, Caps N’ Taps and Mill
City Brew Werks in Camas, hopheads can partake
in some pretty terrific breweries and tap houses—

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Picturesque downtown Camas oﬀers a variety of shops and restaurants, including the iconic Natalia’s Café, opposite. The Wednesday
Farmer’s Market draws visitors and locals for fresh, seasonal produce. Lacamas Lake, above, located a few miles north of Camas and
Washougal, oﬀers hiking, ﬁshing and boating opportunities.

many of which serve up comfort food to accompany your pint of choice.
Aspiring artists will want to check out The Paint Roller. Owners Rich Beck and Kathy Dering schedule
this mobile paint party at hot spots in the area with themes that include Brushes and Brews, Coupled
Canvas and Canvas and Cupcakes (for the little ones).
From the year-round Camas First Fridays that draw people in for after-hours shopping to the seasonal
Wednesday Farmer’s Market, this town really knows how to build community and promote local.
Take a morning to browse unique clothing stores such as Lily Atelier, Allure Boutique and the Vutique
or home décor stores like Lizzabeth A and Camas Antiques. At Navidi’s Olive Oils & Vinegars, you can taste
all of the oils, vinegars and sea salts carried here. Dubbed as a specialty food store, there’s more to Navidi’s
than the name suggests.
When the sun goes down, there’s still exploring to do. Take in a show at the historic Liberty Theatre—
built circa 1927. Meticulously restored in 2011, the Liberty offers traditional concession snacks as well as
premium beer and wine selections available in both screening rooms. Enjoy a craft cocktail at Birch Street

OUR GORGE : EXPLORE
Uptown Lounge. The staff here is passionate about adult beverages, and weekends feature live music that Portlanders travel across the bridge for.
Dinner can be as casual as Twilight Pizza Bistro, as international as Miss
Nola’s Café or Nuestra Mesa or a little unique—like The Puffin Café, a floating
restaurant at the Port of Camas/Washougal. At Feast 316, diners enjoy handmade pasta, fresh seafood and prime cuts like New York strip and Filet Mignon.
Washougal and Camas blend the best of outdoor adventure and a sophisticated flare into one synergistic destination.
Viki Eierdam is a freelance writer and frequent contributor to The Gorge Magazine

Distance: 49 miles, Driving Time: 1 hour
From Hood River, take I-84 toward Portland, then US-30 west crossing
the Bridge of the Gods to WA-14 west. The downtown cores of Washougal
and Camas are less than five miles apart.
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WE LCOME SPRING
KLICKITAT COUNTY WASHINGTON

Say “hello” to Spring with a refreshing stroll through the vineyards, rafting on a scenic river,
bicycling through lush forests or windsurfing in the bright sunshine…Klickitat County has it all!
Finish a wonderful scenic driving loop tour with a visit to our premium wineries, museums,
colorful shops and festive restaurants. Oh, and meet some of the friendliest folks around.
Life is just Better on the northside… join us this spring
Mountain Biking

From a steep Hood River Valley hillside comes some
uniquely Gorge wines, with a touch of France
STORY BY VIKI EIERDAM • PHOTOS BY ADAM LAPIERRE AND COURTESY OF PHELPS CREEK VINEYARDS

34

He connected with that community, including Cliff Blanchette and his wife Eileen—who owned the
oldest winery in the area, Hood River Vineyards; Lonnie Wright, another Gorge wine pioneer who has
since helped many Gorge vineyards and winemakers find their way, as well as created the respected
The Pines 1852 vineyards and winery; and Bill Swain, a seasoned enologist and winemaker. “The story
is that everyone in the community was always waiting for the wine scene to take hold,” Morus said, “so
anyone who came in with interest was embraced by them and they were very helpful.”

Adam Lapierre

A

n enthusiastic community, ideal vineyard
site and strong team could be considered
a vintner’s trifecta. If so, Robert Morus,
founder of Phelps Creek Vineyards, was the lucky
soul to hit it nearly three decades ago. This stability and support has allowed him to focus his
energy on growing a brand that, more recently,
shares a commonality with Gevrey-Chambertin,
the famed village in Burgundy, France, that produces some of the most prestigious and expensive wines in the world.
“There was no vineyard here at the time,”
Morus said of the hillside property on Hood
River’s Westside that he found for sale the first
time he visited the area. Morus, a pilot for Delta
Airlines, had been on a scouting trip to Oregon,
looking for vineyard property within a 90-mile
radius of Portland International Airport. “There
was just land and there was a lot of welcoming
by the wine community, which was smaller then.”
SPRING 2017 : THE GORGE MAGAZINE

Phelps Creek Vineyards owner Robert Morus planted his ﬁrst three
acres of Pinot Noir on his hillside property in Hood River in 1990.
His estate vineyards now encompass 34 acres of Pinot Noir and
Chardonnay, and he grows several other varietals on vineyard sites
on the Washington side of the Columbia River.

Because Blanchette was already making great
Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, Morus was confident
these two Burgundian varietals were well suited
for the western side of the Columbia Gorge.
Morus planted his first three-acre block of Pinot
Noir in 1990, followed by Chardonnay in 1992.
Over time, Irineo Magana, cellar/vineyard manager, came on board and has now been with Phelps
Creek for more than 20 years. At the 2016 Oregon
Wine Symposium, Magana was bestowed the Vineyard Excellence Award. The honor symbolizes the
expertise and dedication that Magana brings to the
vines he’s been entrusted with. During his watch,
the vineyards have increased sevenfold.
With similar growing characteristics to the
Dundee Hills in the Willamette Valley, Phelps Creek
Vineyards is nevertheless strongly influenced by its
higher elevation—as much as 500 feet higher. “Burgundy Grand Cru sits at 300 meters so we’re closer
in elevation than the Willamette Valley, and the Willamette Valley has coastal influences,” Morus said.
“That doesn’t mean one is better, just that they’re
different and we celebrate that diversity.”
With so much talk of Burgundy, it’s no surprise that Phelps Creek has a strong connection
to this legacy region. Alexandrine Roy, a fourth
generation winemaker at Domaine Marc Roy in
Gevrey-Chambertin, joined Phelps Creek a few
years ago after Morus met her at a pre-International Pinot Noir Celebration luncheon. Roy was
initially a contributing winemaker but now is director of winemaking at Phelps Creek and travels
to Hood River several times each year to affect her
style upon the wines and craft her signature cuvée.

d

info @ mtHoodWinery . com

Mt. Hood Winery

Photo by Jennifer Gulizia

Oregon Winery of the Year - 2016
Oregon Wine of the Year - 2014 Pinot Noir
Wine Press Northwest

EXTRAORDINARY WINES. UNPARALLELED DESTINATION.

Our BOUTIQUE WINERY takes pride in producing high-quality wines sourced
from the FINEST VINEYARDS in the region. We specialize in Cabernet, Merlot,
Zinfandel, Syrah, and Chardonnay. Come sample our wine, relax on our patio
and enjoy stunning VIEWS of the Columbia River and Mount Hood.

Vineyard tours are a hallmark of Phelps Creek, where participants can walk the rows of vines and learn the nuances of winegrowing, then
visit the winery facilities and taste directly from the barrels. Alexandrine Roy, above right, director of winemaking, visits Phelps Creek
several times a year from her own winery in Burgundy, France, to aﬀect her style on the wines and craft her signature cuvee.
welcoming tasting room & patio

5.5 scenic miles south of hood river on hwy 35

541.386.1277 / wyeastvineyards.com

Adam Lapierre

Open Daily 11-5 or so

Recently, Roy tasted through 100 barrels of estate Pinot Noir—half of which undergoes spontaneous
native fermentation—with Morus and Swain. Their rating system edits the production down to the most
extraordinary 10 barrels, which become approximately 240 cases of Cuvée Alexandrine.
The international attention that Phelps Creek has received for its Cuvée Alexandrine as well as its estate
blend will be front and center at the 2017 International Pinot Noir Celebration Grand Seminar. As winemaker of both Phelps Creek and Domaine Marc Roy in Burgundy, Roy will share the platform with four
other esteemed vignerons who combine the Old World stylings of France with New World interpretations.
With 34 acres of estate Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, Phelps Creek diversified its lineup a couple of
years ago by taking over operations of two other vineyard sites on the Washington side of the Gorge.
Cool weather Sauvignon Blanc, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Gris and Viognier grow on 15 acres that adjoin
Celilo Vineyards on Underwood Mountain.
The first impression that guests at the Phelps Creek tasting room receive is a unique one. Rather
than views of lush vines, there are frames of the back nine. Since the vineyard itself sits at the end of a
steep, mile-long gravel road, Morus opened a tasting room at the nearby Hood River Golf and Country
Club, which he felt would lend a similar pastoral feel but be easier for customers to reach.
For those who want to delve a little deeper into the glass, Phelps Creek offers tours and wine club
events. From May to October, reservations can be made to walk the rows of vines, take in the stunning
views, visit the winery facilities and, ultimately, migrate to the barrels to taste the seasons and nuances
that each clone brings to the bottle.

36

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“They come away saying they’ve never been
so close to the wine,” Morus said of wine tour
participants. “We have great tasting room experiences but a deeper appreciation of the intimacy
of winemaking is gathered (on our tours) and
those people become our most passionate fans.”
Wine club members beneﬁt from three separate events that coincide with new releases.
March showcases barrel tastings of the latest
vintages; a picnic in the vineyard ushers in June;
and the September salmon and prime rib thank
you party—hosted under the stars—includes live
music and is always a hit. Morus has also been
known to throw Burgundian-inspired harvest celebrations where lobster is ﬂown in from the East
Coast and library wines are poured.
Morus, who ﬂies international long-haul
ﬂights, could own a winery nearly anywhere in
the world. The fact that he chose Hood River
speaks volumes, not only to the Oak Grove loam
his award-winning vines are rooted in, but to the
close-knit community he calls home.
For more information, including tour reservations, go to phelpscreekvineyards.com

Viki Eierdam is a freelance writer and frequent contributor to
The Gorge Magazine.

DISCOVER THE
AMAZING WINES

AND STUNNING BEAUTY OF

LYLE, WASHINGTON

THE NEXT GENERATION
OF WASHINGTON WINE
can be found in the heart of the
incredible Columbia Gorge,
only 75 breathtaking minutes
east of Portland.

For individual winery info:
WINERIES OF LYLE.COM

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GENERAL TIPS FOR VISITING GORGE WINE COUNTRY
Courtesy of the Columbia Gorge Winegrowers Association

S
Consider hiring a designated driver.
S
Refrain from wearing heavily scented items, such as perfumes
and lotions. Even lipstick can affect your wine tasting experience. Allow
the day to be filled with the aromas of wine!

S
Explore varietals unfamiliar to you. Often these can be a delightful
surprise.
S
Ask tasting room staff questions. Gorge residents are proud to
live here and serve local wines, and love to share wine knowledge with
others. Ask staff where to have dinner, or where to stay, hike and play.
S
Don’t be afraid to use the dump buckets. It is not a sign that you
don’t care for a wine, and no one will be offended if you spit out a wine
or dump what is left in your glass. On the contrary, most wine staff
appreciate that it may be necessary to not swallow every wine in order
to maintain your wine tasting pleasure and maintain your palate.
S
Try a mid-week excursion. Often tasters who visit on a weekday find
the tasting rooms more intimate and the experience more one-on-one.
S
Have fun. Don’t take it too seriously. After all, wine is about enjoyment on your personal level. Drink what you like and enjoy with others.

Dive into spring by spending some time in Hood River. With the longer, warmer days come spring activities, including Aprilâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hood River Valley Blossom Time
and its many related events. Downtown Hood River and the Heights feature dozens of unique shops and boutiques, jewelers, restaurants, breweries, wine
tasting rooms, bakeries, coffee shops, galleries, museums and more. Come see what all the buzz is about this spring in Hood River.

40

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S P E C I A L

A D V E R T I S I N G

S E C T I O N

mark etpl ace: ho od ri ver

WAAAM

APLAND JEWELERS

Visit the Western Antique Aeroplane
and Automobile Museum and see one
of the largest collections of still flying
antique vehicles in the country. A large
new expansion has recently opened to
accomodate more cars and antique engines, and allow for an expanded Kid’s
Zone. Open daily from 9am-5pm.

Designers, goldsmiths, and craftsmen,
we make and repair in our state-of-theart workshop. Ken Apland brings 38
years of experience as a goldsmith and
gemologist, so whether you need to have
old jewelry redesigned, an heirloom restored, or an entirely new design made
we can create it using reclaimed metals
and responsibly sourced gems.

1600 Air Museum Road • (541) 308-1600
waaamuseum.org

216 Oak Street • 541-386-3977
info@aplandjewelers.com

HOOD RIVER JEWELERS

HOOD RIVER STATIONERS

We are artists and professional jewelers.
If you are looking for something special,
we can custom design it. We work with
silver, gold, platinum and more. We
can use your stone or work with you to
find the perfect stone for your needs.
Hood River Jewelers also carries beautiful timepieces, diamond jewelry and
designer collections.

Life is always a special occasion, and we
can help you celebrate!
213 Oak Street • 541-386-2344
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Three Gorge residents find solace—and a lot of other things—in long-distance bicycle touring

Ernest Hemingway wrote, “It is by riding
a bicycle that you learn the contours of
a country best, since you have to sweat
up the hills and coast down them.” It’s also

how you get to know the people of a country best, according to the
three Gorge cyclists proﬁled here who travel epic distances by bike.
What else beckons them to long stretches of road and trail? Read on . . .

THE GORGE MAGAZINE : SPRING 2017 43

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2/23/17 12:20 PM

Bart Cohn

AGE 47 • PERSONAL ASSETS MANAGER
LIVES IN HOOD RIVER

44

Jeff Hirsch

O

n a hot August day in 2013, Bart Cohn and
his dad were riding their recumbent bikes
on the Twin Tunnels trail from Hood River
to Mosier where, while taking a break, a cyclist
riding west on a touring bike loaded with bags
pedaled toward them. Curious, Cohn called out,
“Hey, where are you headed?” That simple question sparked a conversation that would change
Cohn’s course for years to come.
They learned that the cyclist, Robbie Sweetser,
was heading to the coast where he would end a
5,400-mile bike journey from North Carolina. “It
just blew me away!” Cohn says. “He didn’t look like
some uber-athlete from the Gorge. He just looked
like some normal guy in his late 50s.” The Cohns
rode with Sweetser back to Hood River while Bart
bombarded him with questions about bike touring. “How do you know how to do this?” he asked,
and “Could a guy like me do this?”
A guy like Cohn was a guy who was “feeling
his mortality,” he says, even though he was
only in his early 40s. In 2012, he’d had a serious
mountain biking accident that landed him in the
hospital. A year later, he spent his 43rd birthday
having foot and ankle surgery, also related to a
mountain biking injury. “I felt like, gosh, maybe
I’m too old to be doing stuff like this,” he says.
Riding the recumbent bike was part of his rehab.
Sweetser steered Cohn toward the Adventure
Cycling Association’s website, a go-to source for
touring cyclists, where Cohn was lured by the legendary TransAmerica Trail, a 4,200-mile bike route
across the U.S. Before long, he’d committed to riding
it, even though he’d never taken an overnight
bike trip or cycled more than 50 miles in a day. “I’d
ﬁnally come upon something that seemed at a pace
that I could handle,” Cohn explains. “Bike touring

Bart Cohn, clockwise from above, at the Gateway Arch in St. Louis;
riding near Breckenridge, in Summit County, Colorado; crossing
the Continental Divide in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.

people are people who just keep pedaling.” After obsessively planning the trip for nearly three years and
recovering from a slipped disk in 2015, he ﬁnally took off on May 11, 2016.
“Virginia or bust!” That’s what Cohn’s wife, Karen, posted on her Facebook page at the start of his epic
adventure in Astoria, Ore., with a photo of him in a Grateful Dead jersey standing next to his bike—a Surly
Long Haul Trucker decked out with neon-yellow panniers, laminated hardwood fenders, and Rastafariancolored metal spacer rings on the handlebar stem. “I put a lot of stuff on my bike that made me happy,”
he says—and that he hoped would also spread positivity to others.
Cohn feared injury going into the trip more than trafﬁc or inclement weather. But his body surprisingly cooperated. “I just tried to show up in good shape,” he says. His daily training had consisted of
riding his bike 15 miles, walking for an hour, and swimming a half mile. On the trail, he rode about 300
miles a week, except for a planned 10-day stop in St. Louis, his hometown, and an unplanned ﬁve-day
layover in Rainbow, Ore., due to snow on the mountain passes.
Staying in Rainbow was perhaps fated, Cohn believes. It allowed Ian Graves, a 59-year-old cyclist
from Las Vegas whom Cohn had originally met in the Siuslaw National Forest, to catch up and with whom
he rode for the next 1,800 miles. Cohn called him “the man with the bionic heart” because of his recent
heart valve replacement. To overcome his own challenges, Graves recited a mantra, Endeavor to Persevere—words that also resonated with Cohn. The kindness of the many locals he met along the way like
James Yeager, a farmer-barber from Ness City, Kan., also fueled Cohn’s ride. On July 12, Yeager cut Cohn’s
hair. The next day, Cohn received a phone call from Yeager who had retrieved his number from the barber shop caller ID. “He asked if I was okay because he was worried about me with all the thunderstorms
in the area,” Cohn explains. That kind of support was not infrequent nor was the positive response he
got to his bike and psychedelic jersey from all sorts of people, he says—from moms to cowboys.
He ﬁnished the last leg of the ride from Sebree, Ky., to Yorktown, Va., with 64-year-old Yoram Ephraim
from Israel. As they readied themselves to tackle rural Appalachia, known to cyclists for its pedal-snapping
dogs, barreling coal trucks, and lung-busting hills, Cohn and Ephraim debated whether to circumvent that
section of the trail. Ultimately, they decided to forge ahead with Ephraim’s mantra: We go with courage.
They encountered lots of dogs, but no dog bites; fewer trucks than they’d anticipated; and some of the
poorest, yet kindest, people Cohn has ever met, he says.
In many ways, the trail was a great equalizer—oblivious to age, salaries, religion and politics. “On the
trail, those barriers were all gone,” says Cohn. By the time he rolled up to the Yorktown Victory Monument on Sept. 6, so were his own.

SPRING 2017 : THE GORGE MAGAZINE

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2/23/17 12:20 PM

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Erica Nelson, from top, navigating rocky terrain in the Bitterroot Mountains of Montana; stopping for a rest in
Wyoming; and on a lonely road in Colorado

n 2014, Erica Nelson was halfway into a two-month cycling tour through eight countries skirting the
Baltic Sea when she was alerted by her neighbors in White Salmon that a wildﬁre was scorching its
way toward her home.
“There was a possibility that my house could burn down, but when I turned around and looked at
my trailer full of everything that I needed, I thought, ‘I’m lacking nothing that’s not right here with me.
I’m okay,’” Nelson says.
Bike touring, she says, reminds us of how simple life can be. It’s an insight, among many others, that
she’s gleaned from more than 20 years of embracing what she calls “self-contained, human-powered
adventures.” Prior to the Baltic Sea trip, she pedaled through New Zealand for six months; across
the greenways of the Czech Republic; and around Chile’s Lake District. She’s also been tackling, in
segments, the world’s longest mountain bike trail: the 2,700-mile Great Divide Mountain Bike Route
(GDMBR) that stretches from Canada to Mexico, zigzagging the Continental Divide. So far, she’s cycled
through Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado with New Mexico still to go.
“Part of venturing out to the Continental Divide and riding parts of it solo is about, ‘What am I made
of? What am I capable of? What’s beyond what I know now?’” Nelson explains. With some 200,000 feet of
total elevation gain through remote wilderness, the trail is as tough as it is stunning. “It’s an experience in
contrasts,” she says. “While riding, I feel the elation of reaching summits, only to plummet at joyous and high
speeds back down to the elevations that I had just spent hours climbing—only to begin climbing again.”
One of the most daunting sections, she says, was riding
solo across the 200-mile Great Basin of Wyoming—an arid, edgeless expanse with no towns along the way. “The landscape
is so desolate that I actually experienced vertigo because there
was nothing to focus on. When you’re out there on your own,
there’s no other way but through it. That’s when the mental
fortitude kicks in,” she says.
The rewards, however, are well worth the effort. Nelson recounts when, after a long day of trundling through the wilting
heat of southern Montana in August, a mother-daughter rancher
team scooped her up. “They invited me in for a farm-fresh meal,
ice cream, and a soft bed for the night. It’s the simple gestures

of kindness and concern that remain memorable. It’s also the sublime moments of watching a moose and calf feed in a lake as the morning fog lifts;
taking the time to watch a beaver build a dam; or making camp in a ﬁeld of
wildﬂowers with a double rainbow overhead after a long day.”
Whether Nelson is touring on her mountain bike or road bike, she
pulls a single-wheel BOB trailer loaded with food (PB&J is a staple), gear
and clothing, which always includes a skirt to change into after pedaling all
day. “I want to be able to get out of these stinky, tight cycling clothes when
I pull into town and look like a girl for a little bit,” she says.
She also leaves room in her schedule for spontaneous adventures. “I
may have a goal for the day or for the trip, but I really try to embrace each
day as it comes along,” she says. “If a fantastic swimming hole appears, it’s
time for a swim! If a river seems too perfect not to ﬁsh, then I’ll take a day off
for ﬁshing. I’ve been welcomed into families’ homes, invited to spend time
on farms, participate in festivals, and be an impromptu guest speaker. If I was
attached to miles and destinations, I would miss these connections.”
On touring alone as a woman, she says she’s always felt safe. (Although, she does worry about black bears and grizzlies when camping in
the backcountry.) “We sit in front of our televisions and fear is fed to us.
Turn off your television and go ride your bike, or go travel, and you will
learn that the world is full of lovely people,” she says.
When she’s not traveling herself, Nelson stays engaged in bike touring
by hosting other cyclists through the Warm Showers program, an international exchange that provides touring cyclists with a free place to stay.
She’s been hosting for eight years. “Every year, it seems like there’s more
and more cyclists coming through the Gorge,” she says. “I’m on a map,
my phone number is there, and cyclists call me up. You meet them, ﬁx
them a meal, give them breakfast, and send them down the road in the
morning.”
She once hosted 19 teenagers biking across the country on an organic
farm tour. They pitched tents on her 20-acre pasture and she made them
a big pile of lasagna. “I hear about their stories and their adventures and
that gets me excited about doing my own trips,” she says, which include
plans to meander along several of Oregon’s Scenic Bikeways this summer.
“There’s so much to discover right here.”

Thomas Camero

AGE 75 • PROFESSIONAL CIVIL ENGINEER
LIVES IN HOOD RIVER

I

n 1966, Thomas Camero wanted
to go to Acapulco, Mexico. “I had
time, but I didn’t have any money,”
says Camero, who had just graduated from California State University,
Long Beach. “So I said, ‘Heck, I’ll
just ride there.’”
Never mind that bicycle touring wasn’t really a thing then. “There were no
panniers to be had, there was one bicycling magazine, no one was doing it,”
Camero explains. After driving from Long Beach to Tucson, Ariz., where his
aunt lived, Camero parked his car at her house, secured his gear and guitar to
his 10-speed with bungee cords and wire baskets, and headed south. About
six weeks and 1,600 miles later, he was in Acapulco watching the cliff divers.
“That was my ﬁrst big ride,” Camero says. “I just got on my bike and
rode. It’s so hard to get off that cloud after you’ve ﬁnished something like
that. All you can do is plan your next ride.” Since then, he’s cycled the Paciﬁc
Coast from Oregon to Mexico; from Jasper, Alberta to Yellowstone; from
Mazatlan, Mexico to the Panama Canal; throughout Cuba ﬁve times; and
across the U.S. four times—most notably in 2014 at age 73 in the ﬁrst-ever
Trans Am Bike Race on the TransAmerica Trail.
“With no entry fee, no prizes, no T-shirt and no drafting, how could
you go wrong?” Camero says about his decision to sign up. “And no crew,”
he adds. “You’re on your own. You gotta ﬁgure it out. This is the backpacking
thing. I’m at the far end of the backpacking model for sure, but it’s
incredible.” On June 7, he rolled up to the start line in Astoria alongside 44
other cyclists, popped a bottle of Champagne, toasted the race organizers
and took off. “Within a minute, I was in last place,” he says, in part because
he was the only one towing a trailer loaded with extra food and gear. “I’m
not very fast, but I was still racing.”
Jacob Wilson, a 32-year-old cyclist from Washington D.C., who wasn’t

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Thomas Camero, from top, in Grand Teton National Park during the inaugural
TransAm Bike Race in 2014; during one of his five bike tours in Cuba; and at
a landmark stop at a bike shop in Newton, Kans., on the TransAm.

racing but who was also riding the trail that summer, knew of Camero before he’d ever met him. “He’d
become a trail legend,” Wilson says. “Other cyclists I passed and chatted with said that there was a guy in
the race in last place and if you come across him, he might offer you a drink from his third water bottle,
which was ﬁlled with whiskey. I thought, ‘Am I going to meet this dude and if so, will I be cool enough to
get offered the third ﬂask?’”
In early September, Wilson caught up with “the legend” in Booneville, Ky., (named after Daniel
Boone) where they both sipped from that fabled third bottle at the Booneville Presbyterian Church
Cyclists’ Only camp, their lodging for the night. “Tom was the only one left in the race and he was still
as pumped about it as ever,” Wilson recalls. “He seemed super positive and excited about whatever
the day was going to bring or whatever the day delivered. He felt good to be around.” After 116 days
of pedaling, Camero made history as one of only 25 ﬁnishers in the inaugural event. He raced again in
2016, ﬁnishing in 97 days after ditching the trailer, and with it, 75 pounds.
Equal to Camero’s enthusiasm for the TransAm is his passion for cycling through Cuba, where for
more than a decade he’s been able to easily get tourist cards because of his ﬂuency in Spanish—learned
during his Peace Corps service in Honduras. While touring, he stops in each town’s parque central, the
town center where people hang out, and often begins playing his guitar. “Soon someone else comes by
with a saxophone,” he says. “Then someone brings you a beer. You’re just playing along and before you
know it, it’s a party. Wherever it is, it happens time and again.” He then hands out used guitar and violin
strings which he collects from his Hood River musician friends before each trip. The Cuban musicians,
he says, can’t believe it as they can’t get them because imported items are prohibitively expensive. “I
mean, these are musicians. To be without strings… .”
Camero was planning to visit Cuba a sixth time in January this year until, while searching for ﬂight deals,
he discovered he could travel to Southeast Asia for only a hundred bucks more; so instead, he planned a
tour from Bangkok to Singapore, around 1,800 miles. “It’s one of the classic international rides and it’s
just 8 to 10 dollars a day to stay in these incredible places,” he says. “The meals are amazing. Wanna go?”
This ride, he explains, will help him get his bike kit together for Tour Aotearoa in New Zealand,
slated for February 2018, which also covers 1,800 miles.
“Doing all these big bike rides instills a good amount
of conﬁdence in other places and people,” Camero
says. “Goodness seems to always prevail. Most times,
all is good on a bike. Really good.”
Camero will host a screening of the documentary,
“Inspired to Ride,” about the inaugural TransAm Bike
Race on April 1 at Columbia Center for the Arts.
Based in Hood River, Cate Hotchkiss writes about health and
wellness for national and regional magazines. She blogs at gorgegirlruns.com.

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THE
[IN]VISIBLE
30 PERCENT
LATINOS MAKE UP NEARLY A THIRD OF THE POPULATION IN HOOD RIVER COUNTY. THEIR
LIVES AND CULTURE REMAIN LARGELY UNKNOWN TO THEIR NEIGHBORS,
BUT MANY ARE SEEKING TO FIND THEIR PLACE IN THE COMMUNITY.
STORY BY KATHY WATSON â&#x20AC;¢ PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVID HANSON

50

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J

uan Reyes is a property appraiser for Hood River County, and a father of three daughters. He’s a DJ on Radio Tierra. He volunteers to teach computer and GED classes in Spanish, and is the best-known Mexican wedding officiant in the Gorge. He’s not a
farmworker, or a migrant, or in the shadows, but he surely knows the life.
Juan’s mother was pregnant with him when she came here from Mexico in 1984. “I grew up in the Gorge, working in the orchards
as soon as I was old enough to go out, picking strawberries, cherries, apples, pears, cucumbers.” Soon, the English he learned in school
allowed him to get jobs in retail and finally, to work for the county, where he’s been for eight years.
Juan and 6,900 Latinos, mostly from Mexico, make up 30.5 percent of Hood River County’s population. For the most part, the rest
of us here do not interact with them much. Sure, we eat lunch at El Cuate’s Burgers and Tacos or toss off an “Hola!” to people who look
Mexican to us. But we don’t know much about the culture of a third of our neighbors. We stumble over what to call them. We don’t know
how they live their lives or even how we might get to know them better.
Hispanic? Latino? Mexican? If you want the right “handle,” here’s advice from Yesenia Castro, a program coordinator at The Next
Door: “Hispanic refers to the Mexican colonizers from Spain. But that’s the box we have to check on forms, on the census. Most people
identify first with the country they’re from, but Latino is better than Hispanic.”

Ramon Martinez

Yesenia Castro

Understanding our 30 percent starts with the power of family.
“Family comes before anything,” says Gladys Rivera, a program coordinator at Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital.
Rivera, who grew up in the Hood River Valley, recalls weekends
with family and friends. A call would go out: posole is the main
course. And everyone else would arrive with the rest of the feast.
Leticia Valle, a Gorge native and a manager of health promotion services at The Next Door, remembers Sundays centered on
family. Her family would arrive at St. Mary’s Catholic Church at 8
a.m., and then it was a family trip to Walmart, the grocery store,
lunch at McDonald’s or Taco Bell, and then home to watch soccer
on TV. The visits to McDonald’s scratched Valle’s itch to be part of
the larger community. “I couldn’t go to school and say, ‘I helped
my Mom kill a chicken this morning.’ The other kids would just
think that was gross.”
Work is revered nearly as much as family. “My parents were
always working,” recalls Castro.
“Work, home, work, home,” says Rivera of the monotonous
life of her working parents, aunts and uncles. “They would never
say ‘no’ to money. My family is so hard working. They all had two

Juan Reyes and his daughter

Humberto Calderon

jobs. That’s just what you did. I noticed that the white parents I
knew were more selective of the jobs they would take. But we
took anything.”
Sitting around the lunch table at Duckwall Pooley, Alejandro
Aguilera introduces his friends Epi and Ignacio, both of whom
have lived in Hood River for more than 40 years. Epi repeats Rivera’s mantra, saying his life is “home to work to home to work.”
The three have their lunches spread out before them: Epi has
a bean torte, Ignacio a burrito, and Alejandro, the youngest of
the three, a burrito with a Hood River twist: lots of fresh spinach.
They are talking about how food helps them feel close to Mexico.
And the best cook they know? The men look sheepishly at each
other: “Mom,” they say. Epi says he enjoys Chinese and American
food, but “it’s hard to forget our food.”
Attend one of the three big St. Mary’s festivals, or a bull riding
rodeo, or a Quinceañera, and you will find the food of Mexico
is inextricably linked to music and culture and family. Valle describes the scene at the summer bull riding events in Tygh Valley:
“Live bands, dancing horses, tacos, beer, fruit. There’s 500 to 1,000
people dancing in the dirt, or sitting in the bleachers.”

Gladys Rivera, above, studies for nursing school at home while her sister and kids eat lunch. Leticia Valle, below, on a hike with Latin
Xplorers. Ramon Martinez, opposite, at work at Westcliff Lodge, where he has handled maintenance for 25 years. Opening page,
Yesenia Castro leads a group of Latin Xplorers on an early spring hike at the Syncline.

The Quinceañera, a coming of age celebration for Latino girls turning 15, is a blend of food, faith
and celebration. The day begins with a ceremony at St. Mary’s, followed by dinner and dancing, paid
for by a girl’s padrinos, or godparents. During the season, May to September, there’s at least one
Quinceañera each weekend, often at the National Guard Readiness Center in The Dalles, the Hood
River Armory or the fairgrounds in Odell. Rivera says it’s something every Latina girl here dreams of. “It
is either that, or a car,” she says. She took the Quinceañera.
The food, the music, the festivals: “I feel like I’m in Mexico,” says Ramon Martinez, who came from
Colima, Mexico, in 1984 to pick fruit and stayed because Hood River reminded him of home, “without
the mangoes, avocado or coconut.” He’s been handling maintenance at Westcliff Lodge for 25 years.
He counsels new arrivals from his country to “fit in.” First thing, he says, “Learn the language. Instead
of watching a novela on TV, read a book, go to the gym, follow the rules. Some folks learned the hard
way. You drink and drive, you get deported.”
Martinez is the first to admit that even though he “fits in” now, with 25 years in the same job and a
hip soul patch on his lower lip, he’s had to prove himself. “Eight years ago, we bought a house, and I
could tell the neighbors were worried. They think we’re dirty, we’re loud. But we improved the house,
helped people out with little things, and now they accept us. And we play our music. Every house has
to have music. We are a very happy people. I even leave the music on for the puppies.”
For many, fitting in is a complicated task. “As
a girl, we didn’t have play dates at Anglo girls’
houses,” says Valle. “We came straight home from
school. Our parents thought the Anglo community
was too promiscuous, and my parents wanted to
protect me.” There was also a desire to preserve
the old ways, says Rivera, a practice that was reinforced with frequent visits back home to Mexico.
But now the borders are far less porous, meaning
many American-born Latinos have never seen the
culture unfiltered in Mexico.
“There is a phrase we say: Not from here, not from there,” says Castro. “I’m fortunate that I got to
go to Mexico every winter for two to three months, but I was the gringa there. And here, a lot of the
white kids had opportunities I didn’t have. Where’s my place?”
Reyes says he often feels like he doesn’t fit in anywhere. So he’s collected a group of friends like
himself. “We find our niche, the people like us who are stuck in the middle. You feel lost in a way.”
A cadre of young professionals, those not from here, not from there, including Reyes, Rivera, Aguilera,
Castro and Valle, are putting down a stake in that middle ground, a place where they can revere their
Mexican heritage, but layer on American college educations, healthier ways of eating, and a more liberal
definition of a woman’s role at home and work. Ask around the Latino community, and their names come
up often as leaders, people who volunteer to teach classes and host radio shows on Radio Tierra.

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Photo by Amanda Crosby

If there is one universal touchstone for the
Latino community, it is Radio Tierra, a fast and
loose collection of locally hosted radio shows
that entertain, educate and cajole. Take Valle’s
show. Every Tuesday from 10 to noon she talks
about current services and resources, many at
The Next Door. She interviews community leaders,
takes phone calls and song requests, and in the
second hour, she plays old radio novelas from
the 1950s, interspersed with advice about healthy
eating and TV watching. Pickers out in the orchards often carry radios and tune in.
Most of these young leaders and radio station
stars are members of a Next Door-sponsored
effort, Latinos in Action. Castro, who staffs the
group, explains, “If we want to make changes, we
need to be in positions of power. We want to be
on local boards and be part of the decision making
process.” They study leadership skills, even practicing Roberts Rules of Order.
The young leaders participate in an OSU program, Juntos (Together), that helps Latino kids and
their families reach for college for the first time. Or
they go out on hikes with Latin Xplorers, another
Next Door program, staffed by Valle, that gets Latinos
out into the wild Gorge, not common in a culture
so focused on home, work, home, work.
But still, the divide exists, with those in the
middle reaching out both ways. Some notable
Anglo leaders are reaching out too. Hood River
mayor Paul Blackburn started a Latino Advisory

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16 Oak Street #201 • Hood River
541-386-6555
THE GORGE MAGAZINE : SPRING 2017 53

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Juan Reyes and his daughters, above, at the Radio Tierra studio at The Next Door, Inc., where Reyes hosts a radio show. Humberto
Calderon, below, in his clothing and accessories store, Novedades El Potrillo, in the Hood River Heights.

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54

Council, and Sheriff Matt English goes on Radio Tierra. “He started on the show two years ago,” says
Castro. “People went from being afraid of him to saying, ‘Hey, that’s Matt!’ He’s a celebrity now. People
know they can trust him.”
And that, it seems, is the way to get to know our Latino neighbors. You just have to step out, start
someplace. Rivera says just turn and talk to a Mexican in line at the grocery store. Ask how to prepare
something you see in her cart. Just show up at the rodeo, or walk into a Quinceañera. No one sends
invitations to those anyway, she says; everyone just hears about them at St. Mary’s or The Next Door or
Radio Tierra and shows up. “They’ll make room for you,” she says.
Our Anglo way says, “Don’t visit someone unless you’re invited.” But the Latino way says, “Just
show up. And someone will feed you.” Drop by the Mercado de Valle, the farmer’s market in Odell, says
Reyes, or go to the Zumba classes there.
Valle advises you meet your kids’ Latino friends from school, then meet their parents. “Hang out
for an hour or two. Go to a Juntos event. They won’t forget you. Once they know you are a safe person,
you’ll be invited over.” But relationships, says Castro, take time. “There always has to be a foundation
of trust, and you need to build that trust, work at that. Especially now, after the election.”
Umberto Calderon is worried about his people since the election too. The owner of Novedades el
Potrillo stands at the counter amidst the comforters, boots, cowboy hats, CDs and a statue of the Virgin
Guadalupe. He’s been selling these essentials for 20
years—10 years out of a van out in the orchards, and
10 years here in his shop. This particular morning
he is fresh in from the Radio Tierra show he DJs
three mornings a week from 7 to 9. It’s a morning
wake-up show, full of silly jokes, music, and serious
talk too: politics, domestic violence, health. He says
his people are slipping back into the shadows now.
“They are afraid, very afraid,” Calderon says.
Aguilera feels that fear all around him. Rivera
says they all know who is legal and who is not,
everyone knows. And they all worry for those
friends and family.
Aguilera’s lunch break is over and he’s going
back to work at Duckwall, but he stops to deliver
a message.
“More of you are concerned about us now,”
he says, “and that makes me very happy.”
Kathy Watson is a Hood River chef and writer and is currently working on a memoir, No Bun for Corky: My Life as a Small Town Chef.

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Inside a grassroots effort to restore a treasure of the
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STORY DAVID HANSON • PHOTOS BY CHRIS EMERICK

F

or April Donovan, the dream began with a party.

“I saw a photo from the 1940s of 200 people crammed into an outdoor amphitheater with live
music, beside a cabin way up Mount Hood,” says Donovan, of Hood River. “I started planning
overnight parties there for my friends and I got really into the idea of restoring the cabin as a community place for backcountry fun.”
She’s talking about the Tilly Jane A-Frame, a one-room, two-floored hut built in 1939 by a crew of
Civilian Conservation Corps youth. Donovan has become part of a small group of Portland and Gorge
outdoors people trying to raise funds to preserve the historic cabin.

56

Getting to the hut in winter means hiking
or skiing three miles and 2,000 feet up from the
Cooper Spur ski hill. The trail weaves through
thick forests before emerging into a stark blackand-white landscape of snowy hills and bare tree
trunks charred from the 2011 Dollar Lake fire.
Mount Hood’s summit looms over the pointed
treetops, a dramatic reminder of the big mountain environment. Hidden under the snow, tracks
of the original wagon road that accessed the area
in the late 1800s crisscross the current trail (Tilly
Jane was the wife of William Ladd whose stage
company built the road).
This was where the cool kids hung out on
Mount Hood. The Cloud Cap Inn was built in
1889 and the Tilly Jane Campground and Guard
Station in 1927. Were it not for the Great Depression, a town like Government Camp might be
situated below Hood’s northeast tree line today.
Instead, by the time the economy recovered, developers were planting flags on the south side of
the mountain, leaving Tilly Jane to hearty mountaineers, music lovers, families, partyers, scout
groups, and cooking clubs.

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Now, 78 years later, 1,400 acres encompassing
the historic cabins has been designated as a National Forest Historic District. Cloud Cap’s been
taken over and restored by the Crag Rats, but the
cedar-shingled Tilly Jane A-frame, with its twelveinch wood plank floors, broad picnic tables, wood
burning stove and a patina rich in smoke and
memories, is on the verge of condemnation.
“The roof might have a few more years left,”
says Mike Dryden, East Zone archaeologist for
the Mount Hood National Forest and the man
assigned to oversee restoration.
The Forest Service still owns the cabin, which
is good and bad. Good because it has a mandate
to preserve historic structures (rather than sell
to the highest bidder). Bad because the historic
designation places costly requirements on restoration and the Forest Service does not have the
necessary money.
“We have to retain as much of the historic fabric
as we can using similar or identical materials,”
says Dryden. “It’s expensive—the roof ’s cedar
shingles are three feet long. It’s very difficult to
find those types of cedars.”
If they have to buy shingles on the market,
the roof remodel alone could cost $88,000. The
total remodel and salvation of the cabin will cost
$213,000. The Forest Service has earmarked a
grant to the tune of $10,000. If the Tilly Jane cabin
can be saved it will not be from government
angels. It will be because of a few old-school skiers
from Portland and the Gorge.
Andre Fortin, a Portland native, learned to ski
at Timberline. He competed for his high school

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Charlie Cannon of Mosier, opposite top, skins up through a burnt
forest en route to the Tilly Jane hut. Andre and Jennifer Fortin,
opposite inset, manage the hut and are helping spearhead renovation of the structure, which dates to 1939. David and Michael
Hanson of Hood River, above, take a break on the way up Cooper
Spur, a popular hike and ski destination above the Tilly Jane hut.

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THE GORGE MAGAZINE : SPRING 2017 57

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OUTSIDE

Tilly Jane’s dark interior warms up at night with gas lanterns, a wood burning stove and the conversation of overnighters, above left. Volunteers stock the cabin with firewood each October. Above right,
overnighters at the hut used headlamps and a long exposure to “paint” a nighttime tribute to the beloved backcountry cabin that’s been a popular destination on Mount Hood for nearly 80 years.

team, then graduated into the backcountry as a telemark skier once he realized there were giant swaths of pristine mountain to explore without paying
for a lift ticket. Andre turns 50 this year and he and his wife, Jennifer, still
“earn their turns” in Mount Hood’s backcountry all winter.
For much of the ‘80s, 90’s and ‘00s, the Tilly Jane cabin was managed under a handshake agreement between the Oregon Nordic Club Gorge Chapter and the Forest Service. There was no lock, no group limit, and minimal
upkeep. For 20 years Rich Kadney managed it, alone. An annual October

58

work party stocked wood for the winter and collected donations, usually
about half the cost of the wood. The rest came out of Kadney’s pocket.
Throughout the years of joyous mountain celebrations, the spirit of the Tilly
Jane hut was loved, but its structural integrity was not.
The Fortins were volunteers at the annual wood stocking party and they
used the hut for winter adventures, eventually helping Kadney with his duties until
he passed away. “The cabin was being loved to death,” Fortin says. “That’s what
it is. It’s a party cabin. It allows access to backcountry 1,000 feet below tree line.”

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Fortin, as a member of the Oregon Nordic Club Portland Chapter, took
over management of the hut in 2011. Like Kadney, Andre and Jennifer are the
heart and soul of the Tilly Jane cabin, bringing much needed changes. Now
the hut must be reserved with a 20-person max and a $15 per person fee. All
rental fees go toward the restoration fund. His volunteer wood stocking crew
has grown from five or six in the early years to 60 to 70 people. Last year the
Fortins, Donovan, local volunteers and a team from Hood River-based Wells
Construction completed Phase I of the restoration by returning into place
eight of the 14 boulders and rafters that originally supported the A-frame.
Now the big push is to raise the final $100,000 for Phase II, replacing
some log walls, parts of the foundation, and the roof. Donovan and her
Hood River-based Blue Collar Agency have donated time and marketing expertise toward fundraising. A spring event in Portland is aimed at continuing
the momentum with individual donors and corporate sponsorship.
Dryden is hopeful that there are a couple of big cedars lying under the
snow near Lost Lake. If salvageable, they could provide the roof shingles for
the Tilly Jane hut and the Guard Station at a big savings.
So if things fall in place, 2018 could be the year the Tilly Jane A-frame
gets a new lease on life. In the meantime, the Fortins, Donovan and others
keep an eye on the Forest Service and plans for a land swap that, if approved,
would protect 770 acres of forests adjacent to the Cloud Cap-Tilly Jane Historic District from development by Mt. Hood Meadows Corporation.
To learn more or donate to the Save the Tilly Jane Fund, go to onc-pdx.org.

David Hanson is a writer, photographer and video producer based in Hood River. Find his editorial
and commercial work at ModocStories.com and weddings at CascadiaStudios.com.

he 11th annual Gorge Artists Open Studio Tour features 40 artists from around the Gorge,
who invite visitors into their workspaces April 28, 29 and 30 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. This
year’s tour features six artists joining the tour for the ﬁrst time.
The tour has grown since its start as a ﬂedgling event featuring a handful of artists into one of the
premier studio tours in the region. Artists on the tour work in a wide variety of mediums—including
painting, drawing, jewelry, glass, sculpture, photography, textiles, ﬁber and more. Artists’ studios are
located throughout the Mid-Columbia from Cascade Locks to The Dalles and from Parkdale to Trout Lake.

“As the years go by, the tour grows increasingly
fun and special because it has become a lasting
beacon of community, creativity, education and
inspiration in the Gorge,” said Joanna Kaufman,
an artist and board member of Gorge Artists Inc.,
the nonproﬁt organization that oversees the tour.
“We hope to see lots of familiar faces and new
ones, too, on the tour this year.”
The tour is free and self-guided. For more information, including a map, go to gorgeartists.org.
60

t’s true that Bettina Bardin-Sorensen is a physical therapist. She’s been practicing in Hood
River for 22 years, and co-founded Columbia
Gorge Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine in
1997. But if you end up at her clinic for, say, a knee
injury, you’re likely to get a whole lot more than
just a regimen of leg strengthening exercises.
“My vision for the clinic has always been to be
a wellness studio,” Bardin-Sorensen said. “For us,
the way we like to look at treating patients is to
take a whole-body and lifestyle approach. We’ve
discovered that when someone comes in with an
injury, it’s not as effective to just treat that body
part. If we do, we’re missing an opportunity to
educate a patient on how to live a healthier life
and be more active.”
It’s a mantra Bardin-Sorensen lives as well
as preaches. A lifelong athlete and one-time bike
racer, she began studying kinesiology and exercise physiology in college at the University of Colorado. “I wanted to understand exercise science,
movement, the body,” she said. To learn more she

64

volunteered at physical therapy clinics, where she found her calling. She earned her master’s degree
in physical therapy at Pacific University before moving to Hood River. After two years of practicing at
another clinic, she and a business partner launched Columbia Gorge Physical Therapy.
Bardin-Sorensen became sole owner of the clinic five years ago, and she’s worked since then to fulfill her vision of a wellness studio by building a team of dedicated physical therapists and other diverse
practitioners. Working alongside her are four physical therapists, one physical therapy aide, and one
massage therapist. Naturopathic physician and acupuncturist Melissa Shays works from the clinic, and
certified Pilates instructor Virginia Thomas operates The Pilates Studio of Hood River in space attached
to the clinic. Shays and Thomas operate independently, but frequently “share” patients with the clinic.

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“We incorporate Pilates exercises and concepts
into our treatments and have had great success
with that,” said Bardin-Sorensen, adding that,
when appropriate, patients work with Thomas
during injury rehab or are transitioned to a Pilates
program for ongoing core strength and balance
work. “We communicate with each other so that a
Pilates session and a rehab session complement
each other,” Bardin-Sorensen said. Similarly,
physical therapy patients will sometimes do complementary treatments with Shays.
“With all these different practitioners, we can
consult with each other and come up with a very
comprehensive plan to get people back on track,”
Bardin-Sorensen said. Some of the clinic’s physical
therapists also have additional training, ranging
from yoga certifications to specialty women’s
health treatments including pre- and post-natal
care. All of the clinic’s physical therapists have
most recently been working toward certification
in applied functional science through the Gray’s
Institute—a discipline that combines biological,
physical and behavioral sciences to look at optimal
movement patterns.
“It’s a movement science that we think is
extremely effective,” said Bardin-Sorensen, who

KVH
PHYSICAL AND
OCCUPATIONAL
T H E R A P Y

Physical therapist Bettina Bardin-Sorensen, opposite top and inset, works with patients and athletes using a variety of methods, including
Kaatsu. Physical therapist Kristen Dills, above and opposite bottom, works with patients in The Pilates Studio, which is attached to
Columbia Gorge Physical Therapy. Pilates is incorporated into many patients’ treatment plans.

encouraged her whole team to get certified so they could be more effective and efficient when sharing
patients. “We’re required to do a certain amount of continuing education every year, but we all go above
and beyond what’s required.”
Pursuing extra certifications is par for the course for Bardin-Sorensen, who admits she’s “obsessed
with continuing education.” She became a licensed massage therapist in 1991 and is Stott Pilates
trained. She’s also certified in the Graston Technique, a form of instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization, and earned a certification from the Titleist Performance Institute to work with golfers on
conditioning and swing mechanics (she teams with Mark Gradin, golf pro at Indian Creek Golf Course,
to offer a specialized golf performance program).
She’s also been researching and attending seminars on cannabis for pain management. “I’m not
prescribing it, but if a patient wants to ask about it, I need to understand it,” she said.

A new, state of the art physical therapy center
is coming to Klickitat Valley Health.

(509) 773-1025
Klickitat Valley Health
Goldendale, Washington

Occupational Therapist
Amanda Lozano, OTR

Physical Therapist
Jason Harris, DPT

THE GORGE MAGAZINE : SPRING 2017 65

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Bardin-Sorensen does Kaatsu with Tre Hendricks, above left, to help rehab from knee surgery (photo by Darcy Hunter); and with her
son, Torsenn Brown, right, for conditioning. Below, Pilates instructor Virginia Thomas, who owns The Pilates Studio of Hood River, works
with a client. Thomas and Bardin-Sorensen often “share” patients at the clinic, creating complementary treatment and rehab plans.
541-386-1006
call today for appointment

new location in the Market Place Building
near the bridge and Hood River Inn

The latest addition to her repertoire is Kaatsu, a Japanese exercise method that involves blood
flow modification. Developed in Japan 50 years ago, Kaatsu is only recently emerging in the U.S. as
a low-impact strengthening exercise program for injury rehab, as well as for enhancing performance.
Bardin-Sorensen is one of only a handful of practitioners in Oregon who is a certified Kaatsu specialist.
She’s begun offering it to select patients and athletes in training over the last few months. One of them
is Tre Hendricks, a competitive bike racer from Hood River who underwent two major knee surgeries
this past fall and winter. Hendricks had never heard of Kaatsu before Bardin-Sorensen suggested it,
but he credits it with helping to reduce swelling and regain muscle mass quickly after surgery. “I was
pleasantly surprised,” he said of the innovative treatment.
Bardin-Sorensen plans eventually to offer Kaatsu conditioning classes at the clinic that will be open
to the public.
Along with all the specialties and progressive treatments available at her clinic, Bardin-Sorensen
believes strongly in helping to educate patients about simple ways to improve their health—getting
quality sleep, managing stress, breathing correctly, drinking plenty of water and getting good nutrition.
“If you’re failing in those areas, you’re not going to recover well,” she said.
Patients at the clinic get a full hour for appointments, which helps the practitioners address “global”
issues as well as the specific issue that brought them to the clinic in the first place. “It might not be the
most profitable,” Bardin-Sorensen said, “but if a patient is willing to be here for an hour, we’re going
to get a lot done.”
That’s what drives Bardin-Sorensen and her staff—whom she credits with making the clinic what it
is. “We take every opportunity to educate patients on looking at the whole picture,” she said. “That’s
what I love about this team. We’re not doing just one joint at a time. Everyone who walks through the
door, we feel like we really could have an impact on multiple areas of their life.”
For more information, go to columbiagorgept.com.

This quick Quinoa Salad has been a staple in my house. I often eat it for lunch on its own, and
serve it with soft-boiled eggs or chicken sausages for dinner the same evening. The rest of the
recipe is just about adding in texture and flavor; bright parsley, crunchy beet, salty feta, and
sweet corn are just some of the things you could toss in. Toasted, chopped walnuts would add
richness; halved, tart cherry tomatoes would add acidity; goat cheese would add creaminess;
basil would add a peppery bite; diced shallots would add a little spice. You could go a dozen
directions with this simple salad. My go-to vinaigrette will complement whatever you toss in.
The champagne vinegar base can be pretty aggressive so feel free to add more olive oil than I
do to mellow it a bit. This salad is great day of, as leftovers, and also travels well! It’s a great
picnic food.
Directions:
To cook the quinoa, I follow the recipe for Perfectly Cooked Quinoa from the cookbook It’s All
Good. 1 cup quinoa, 1 3/4 cup water and coarse salt
Rinse the quinoa thoroughly. Place it in a pot on high heat with the water and a big pinch of salt.
Bring the quinoa to a boil, lower the heat, cover the pot and cook until the liquid is absorbed and the
quinoa’s germs look like lots of tiny little spirals. This should be between 12 and 15 minutes. Turn
the heat off, place a try paper towel between the pot and the lid and let the quinoa sit for 5 minutes
before fluffing it with a fork.
A quick personal note: when you “lower the heat” to cook the quinoa, keep it at a nice low simmer. For my stove that means keeping the burner at about medium-low. Once the quinoa is finished,
I pour it out onto a baking sheet and allow it to cool either on the kitchen counter, or in the fridge
if I’m in a hurry.
In a small bowl, whisk together the mustard and vinegar, pour in the olive oil while whisking
continuously. Season to taste with kosher salt and pepper.
Place the cooked quinoa to a large bowl; add in the beets, corn, parsley, and feta. Toss gently
together. Drizzle the salad with the dressing and toss together again. Top the salad with a bit of fresh
pepper and flake salt.
If you want to serve the salad with soft-boiled eggs, I prefer 6-minute eggs. To make them I cover
eggs with cold water in a saucepan. Then bring the water to a quick simmer, turn the heat off, cover
the pot and let the eggs cook for 6 minutes before transferring them to a bowl of ice water. Once cool,
carefully peel, slice in half and set on top of the served salad.

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Kacie McMackin is a food blogger, writer and photographer
at gorgeinthegorge.com. She lives in Hood River and is
a frequent contributor to The Gorge Magazine.

Offering Nordic inspired breakfast and lunch to
the gorge. Something new and exciting for the whole
family to enjoy. Come try traditional recipes such as
aebleskiver (danish pancakes), swedish meatballs,
norwegian lefse (potato crepes) and lots more!

Gift shop • Special event room & terrace

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Quality Mexican food prepared with the freshest and
finest ingredients. Warm, friendly service and a lively
atmosphere. Indulge in generous portions of flavorful
sizzling fajitas, fish tacos, savory enchilada dishes and
daily specials. Happy Hour margaritas, drink specials
and new Happy Hour menu from 4-7pm, Mon-Fri. Full
service bar, take-out menu, gift certificates and catering
services. Open for lunch and dinner 7 days a week.

Celilo began with a desire to honor the bounty of this region
and a commitment to a healthy and sustainable future. Our
ever-changing menu reflects the seasonal highlights of the
region’s growers and foragers. We offer the most innovative
in fresh, local cuisine as well as an award-winning wine list,
full bar, small plate menu, and happy hour daily from 5-6pm.

Home cooking takes on a broader significance at the
Crooked Tree Tavern & Grill. Draw a 30-mile circle around
our cozy community bar and restaurant, and chances are
your meal is sourced from a combination of the outstanding
local farms, ranches, wineries and breweries that are
part of the Hood River Valley’s culinary renaissance.

Relax on our patio, right in the heart of downtown…enjoy
a hand-crafted espresso drink made with locally roasted,
fair trade and organic coffee. Serving breakfast and lunch
all day: panini, salads, smoothies, and fresh baked goods
(vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free options). Local beers on
tap, and local wines by the glass or bottle. Free Wi-fi and
our patio is dog-friendly. Open daily at 7 am.

See for yourself why Everybody’s Brewing is a local favorite!
We brew 12 different styles of beer plus seasonal selections
onsite. The menu is filled with affordable food choices made
with high-quality local ingredients. The atmosphere is warm
and family-friendly. Enjoy the stunning Mt. Hood view from
the outdoor deck, listen to free live music on Friday nights.

If there is one thing a brewer loves more than great beer–
it’s great food and great beer! Our northwest-inspired menu
complements our award-winning brews and features
seasonal, local ingredients. Swing by for a pint, grab a
bite, tour the brewery or just soak up the view. Open daily
at 11am serving lunch and dinner. Guided brewery tours
are offered daily at 1, 2, 3 and 4pm and are free of charge.

Get your daily fuel for your Gorge sports and activities here!
A long time locals favorite coffee house and eatery,
Ground features fresh in-house roasted coffee, house
made pastries and cookies with lots of gluten free
options. We make our soups from scratch every day and
source mostly local and organic ingredients. Feel like a
having a brewski? Local beer and cider on tap.

Located in the heart of the Hood River Valley just minutes
from downtown. Breathtaking views of Mt. Hood and
Mt. Adams from our covered patio. Full service bar and
fabulous northwest cuisine at a reasonable price.
Your everyday vacation spot! Open to the public.

Our seasonal hard ciders offer a new twist on the hard cider
we have been brewing since 1992. With its crisp, clean flavors,
hard cider is a great pairing to the menu options found at
the Black Rabbit Restaurant and Power Station Pub.

pFriem artisanal beers are symphonies of flavor and
balance, influenced by the great brewers of Belgium, but
unmistakably true to our homegrown roots in the Pacific
Northwest. Although they are served humbly, each glass
is overflowing with pride and a relentless aspiration to
brew the best beer in the world. We’ll let you decide.

Recharge at Remedy Cafe’ with organic and satisfying
breakfast or lunch bowls, burritos, curry, smoothies, juices,
hot drinks or in-between meal treats. Vegan and paleo
options, created from scratch from the best quality organic
and local ingredients. Kombucha on tap. Locally roasted,
organic espresso. Free WiFi. Open Mon-Sat 7am-5pm.

River City Saloon, an iconic Hood River fixture, is back under
new ownership. Our entire menu is served until midnight
along with 16 taps, a full bar, and live music most nights.
Enjoy a comfortable atmosphere with seven big-screen TVs,
darts, pool, and ping pong. Open: Mon-Fri, 4pm-2:30am;
Sat & Sun, noon-2:30am; family friendly every night until 9pm.

Showcasing delicious local foods, hand crafted beers,
wines and spirits of the Columbia River Basin in a relaxed
atmosphere. Friendly staff, family dining, and the best
garden patio in The Dalles!

Diners seek out newly remodeled Riverside for some of
the best food and views in the Gorge, and Cebu for great
bar food and drinks. Fresh menus change seasonally—plus
an award-winning wine list. Serving breakfast, lunch and
dinner seven days a week.

Join us for $5 Happy Hour plates Monday-Friday

SOLSTICE WOOD FIRE PIZZA

Enjoy Happy Hour daily, 3pm-6pm and
Live Music every Friday, Saturday and Sunday!

“The best outdoor dining in the Gorge.” –NW Best Places
We are a favorite among locals and visitors. Our cuisine is a
classic, European blend that utilizes fresh, local ingredients
and pairs well with our select wines. Our gardens are the
perfect setting for weddings. Full-service catering available.
“Romantic setting and the best meal I had in town.”
–The Los Angeles Times

Come find us in the basement of the Yasui Building, the
local’s favorite spot for fresh fish, Pan-Asian Cuisine, and a
rockin’ atmosphere! Lots of rotating specials, creative rolls,
and a large sake selection means you’re always trying
something new! Private rooms are available for groups up
to 20 people. Take-out menu available online. Open for
dinner nightly at 5:00, closing hours change seasonally.

Heated patio & waterfront views
across from the park

A local resource guide
for the discerning foodie.
Reviews, recipes & more:
gorgeinthegorge.com

We are nestled on the banks of the Sandy River in Troutdale,
OR–the gateway to the Columbia River Gorge. We are
located halfway between Portland and Multnomah Falls.
Serving exquisite American cuisine since the 1930s. The
menu includes: Seafood specialties as well as traditional
steak, chicken, and pasta dishes; a full bar, and our famous
home-style chicken ‘n dumplins. Open every night for dinner.

Look for our next issue, June 2017.

FReSH
LOCAL
FOOD

A publication by the Hood
River News highlighting the
growing array of producers
and the flourishing
“LOCAL FOOD FIRST”
movement in the Gorge.
For advertising information contact
Hood River News, 541-386-1234,
Or email: jthompson@hoodrivernews.com
Story ideas can be submitted to:
cmarr@hoodrivernews.com

Stop in to try some of the finest handmade cocktails,
beer, wine, cider, & kombucha, the Gorge has to offer.
We have two outside seating areas. Visit our website.

A SPECIAL ADVERTISING
PUBLICATION FROM
THE GORGE MAGAZINE

a guide to
GORGE
breweries,
wineries, cideries
distilleries
AND MORE!

Open 4pm-2am

This special booklet will be
inserted into the
2017 Summer issue of
The Gorge Magazine

WALKING MAN BREWING

Space reservations by March 15th
Ad materials due by April 7th

509-427-5520 • walkingmanbeer.com
240 SW 1st Street • Stevenson

Nestled in Stevenson, WA just minutes from the Bridge
of the Gods, Walking Man has become a destination for
beer enthusiasts and gorge travelers. Experience the
charm of a small community craft brewery. Enjoy our
dog-friendly beer garden or cozy up with a pint and
a bite in the brewpub.
Please visit our website for seasonal hours.

This is not a commitment to lend. Information deemed reliable but subject to change without notice. Subject to credit approval.
Restrictions may apply. Call for Details. Consumer Loan License NMLS-3240, CL-3240.